How to build your cycling endurance

The age old, traditional approach to cycling training involves riders building up a layer cake of intensity – starting with a large base of low intensity endurance sponge before perfecting the product with a thick spread of intensity as spring approaches.

This road racer friendly format might not work so effectively for cyclists training for summer endurance events: century long sportives or full days in the mountains at the likes of the Marmotte and Etape du Tour.

If your key goals are around long, endurance events, then it could well be ‘reverse periodisation’ that suits you better.

“This is where you take the intensity relatively high in the winter – December, January, February, even into March if the weather is bad. And then you add in more endurance as the weather changes, when there’s more time to ride outside in the week, and key endurance events are closer,” explains Hunter Allen, the co-author of cyclist’s training bible, Training and Racing with a Power Meter.

Allen, founder of Peaks Coaching Group, advocates two very clear session types for those looking to build endurance: long, low intensity rides and medium length rides with tempo intervals. As fitness improves, the two can be converged.

Thirty minutes at zone two won’t cut it. These low intensity rides need to be long enough to have any impact.

“Intensity and time are very correlated. For someone who normally rides for an hour, to do a 2.5 hour ride at their endurance zone, that’s going to be enough time to allow them to improve their endurance.

“If they normally do an hour, but just go for 90 minutes, that’s not really going to be enough. Longer is better – three, four and five hour rides will be critical but it’s got to be progressive. You don’t just go out and do five hours if you’ve not done it before, you need to build up gradually.”

It’s sometimes suggested that you don’t need to complete the full distance of your target event in training, the belief being that on-the-day motivation will carry you through. If the event distance is new to you, Allen isn’t a big fan of the approach.

“If you’ve never done the length of time or distance and you’re worried about that, then I want you to do it in training. Mainly just to give you the confidence to know that you can do it.

“If you’ve done plenty of rides or events of the same length or distance, and know completing it is no big deal, there’s no need to worry so much about covering the whole distance in advance.”

Tempo rides

Photo: Daniel Gould

Improving endurance isn’t only about going long, though. You can go shorter, and harder.

“We can ride at tempo [sometimes called sweetspot] – which is 76 to 90 per cent of your threshold power, or 75 to 85 per cent of threshold heart rate. Riding there will also improve endurance.

“There is still a time component but we can reduce it. The tempo intervals need to be 30 minutes, or at least two solid blocks of 20 minutes. That additional intensity will be enough to cause adaptations to the cardiovascular system, for your aerobic engine to become more adapted and increase your endurance.”

You can go into the higher zones, but if your true goal is endurance, doing so might not be perfectly tailored.

“You can do blocks of ten minutes [or more] at FTP”, he says, adding that anything shorter than ten minutes is not going to create enough training stress for you to adapt.

“However, the issue with training at FTP is that you might improve on that number, but you may not improve your endurance very much, you might find power really drops off after three hours.”

Combining the two

“An optimal plan might be two good workouts where you’re riding 60 to 90 minutes of tempo, via a 2×20 or 2×30 or similar. Then on the weekend, pick a day and go out for longer, three to five hours.”

Once you’ve adapted to this, you can begin to build tempo intervals into your long rides, too.

This will both help to boost your overall endurance, and increase your ability to cope with common challenges such as the mountains often nestled into the profile of overseas sportives.

“Some people may have the endurance to ride a 100 mile sportive, but they might not have the muscular endurance to do the Etape du Tour, with three or four mountains. It’s not only just completing the distance, it’s having the fatigue resistance in your muscles to cope with sustained force for a long period of time.

“That’s the real key: stressing the muscles at a high intensity, incorporated in with a longer ride.”

Allen suggests riders ‘leapfrog’ their way to success with these rides.

“First, get used to riding three hours, then when that’s easy, add in intervals – like two sets of 20 minutes at tempo. Once you can do that, maybe ride four hours and test yourself with one thirty minute block at tempo, then one 45 minute block at tempo. If that’s too hard, go back to just doing four hours of endurance, and come back to the intervals when your fitness improves.

“I call that leapfrogging, back and forth. First, ride the time, then time plus a little bit of intensity, then if you’re still good, keep progressing.”

The cherry on the top is his colloquially named ‘kitchen sink’ workout, listed at the back of the book Training and Racing with a Power Meter. This four to five hour ride contains a host of intervals at varying intensities, before completing the last hour at tempo.

“You’ve pre-fatigued yourself in the first three to four hours, so in the last fourth or fifth hour, you’re really digging deep, that’s a great workout because then you’re trying to give yourself the cardiovascular and muscular stress that will help you get over the mountain in that final hour [of an event],” he says.

Want to give it a go? The technical name is ‘Tempo: Aerobic Building, Ride 2’ and the intervals are:

Of course, this is one to work towards, and there’s more sessions in the book,

Going fasted?

Fasted rides have often been used with the goal of weight loss – because a rider completing an easy zone two ride without topping up their glycogen stores will oxidise (burn) more fat.

Many nutritionists now argue that if that rider refuels with the same quantity of calories, they’ll have the same net calorie balance as a person who completed the ride fuelled. In short, fasted rides might teach your body to use fat as fuel, but they won’t cause you to lose ‘excess’ fat or weight.

Fasted rides do set off a process called mitochondrial biogenesis – effectively the creation of new mitochondria in the cells – which in turn boost exercise capacity and thus endurance.

Allen recommends fasted rides only for people who find that they’re ‘bonking’ at the end of long excursions, because training without carbohydrates as fuel will help them to learn how to better access their fat stores when at low intensity. If you’re fuelling your training with carbohydrates and having no problems, he suggests leaving fasted rides off the schedule.

“If you’re going out and doing four hour plus rides and you’re really struggling with your energy levels at the end, you’re bonking and need to improve your ability to use fat as fuel, I would suggest trying some fasted rides,” Allen says advocating hour hours in the saddle, with 2.5 hours ridden on just black coffee and a pit stop to refuel for the last 90 minutes.

“But that’s only if you’re struggling with nutrition in a normal ride,” he says, “if you usually feel fine after a long ride, don’t worry about it and ride fuelled.”

Connect with us

Please keep me up to date with special offers and news from Cycling Weekly and other brands operated by TI Media Limited via email. You can unsubscribe at any time.

We'd also like to send you special offers and news just by email from other carefully selected companies we think you might like. Your personal details will not be shared with those companies - we send the emails and you can unsubscribe at any time. Please tick here if you are happy to receive these messages.